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I was seated by the window, exhausted after a long week, determined to spend the flight in silence. Headphones in. Eyes closed. A clear boundary. The person beside me, an older man with a friendly face, tried to make conversation as we taxied. I smiled politely, nodded once, and turned back toward the window.
I thought that was enough.
I was caught off guard.
I hadn’t said sorry. But he was right—I had felt sorry. As if my need for space required justification. As if choosing silence was somehow unkind.
Seeing my surprise, he smiled and added, “Kindness isn’t the same as availability.”
Then he turned back to his book.
That was it. No lecture. No awkward follow-up. Just a sentence, delivered calmly at 30,000 feet, that landed harder than most advice I’ve ever received.
For the rest of the flight, I thought about how often I blur the line between being kind and being accessible. How frequently I say yes when I mean maybe. How often I smile through discomfort because I don’t want to seem rude. Especially with strangers. Especially with people who mean well.
We’re taught—subtly, constantly—that politeness means openness. That setting boundaries is cold. That kindness requires us to be endlessly accommodating.
But what that man reminded me is this: boundaries don’t cancel kindness. They protect it.
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